The Woman in American HistoryAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1971 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 16
Page 34
... career in the lunatic asylum , or perchance , in the state prison . " The New York Courier and Enquirer cautioned ... Careers The women who took up professional literary pursuits , some- what derisively dubbed by Nathaniel Hawthorne ...
... career in the lunatic asylum , or perchance , in the state prison . " The New York Courier and Enquirer cautioned ... Careers The women who took up professional literary pursuits , some- what derisively dubbed by Nathaniel Hawthorne ...
Page 35
... career choices , unlike those of literary men , were limited . They could not become doctors , lawyers , or ministers ; except for teaching , writing was the only professional career available to a lady in the middle of the nineteenth ...
... career choices , unlike those of literary men , were limited . They could not become doctors , lawyers , or ministers ; except for teaching , writing was the only professional career available to a lady in the middle of the nineteenth ...
Page 188
... Career- oriented women place greater emphasis on the continuity of their working life and make full use of community facilities , such as nursery schools and day care centers , to allow them to combine motherhood with a career . The ...
... Career- oriented women place greater emphasis on the continuity of their working life and make full use of community facilities , such as nursery schools and day care centers , to allow them to combine motherhood with a career . The ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abolitionist active American women Angelina Grimké Anthony army became Bethune birth control black women Boston campaign career Carrie Chapman Catt cause Charlotte Perkins Gilman Chicago child church cities Civil College colonial Comstock law Congress contribution decades Dorothea Dix economic Elizabeth Cady Stanton Emma equal factory federal amendment female suffrage feminist field Frances Frances Wright freedmen girls graduate Grimké Grimké sisters Harriet helped husband industrial Jane Addams labor ladies later leaders leadership legislation lives Lucretia Mott Lucy Stone male Margaret Sanger marriage married Mary Baker Eddy ment mother National NAWSA Negro nurses NWTUL organization percent pioneer plantation political poor President Press reform role Sarah Senate slave social society soldiers South southern status struggle suffragists Susan teachers tion trade union traditional United victory vote wages WCTU Willard winning wives woman suffrage woman's rights movement workers York
References to this book
Theories of Women's Studies Gloria Bowles,Renate Duelli-Klein,Renate Klein No preview available - 1983 |